Panama hosts XXVI OAS General Assembly

From Central America Update, 1-15 June 1996

The hemisphere's foreign ministers convened in Panama City during the week
of June 3 for the body's seventeenth General Assembly. Many proposals and
resolutions were considered, including a controversial rebuke of U.S.
policy toward Cuba.

Participants approved a declaration, the "Consensus of Panama," calling for
the implementation of a number of policies.

Among them is an increase in funding for the removal of antipersonnel mines
in Central America. The mines, which are left over from the civil wars of
the 1980s, number about 170,000: 100,000 in Nicaragua, 30,000 in Honduras,
35,000 in Guatemala and 5,000 in Costa Rica. (While no number is given for
El Salvador by a recent OAS report, a Belgian company hired by that country
for demining claims it has deactivated 9,553 so far and thousands
remain.)35 Their removal is estimated to cost US$6 million and to take four
more years.36

Part of the consensus document also called for the creation of an OAS
commission to help ease the transfer of the Panama Canal to Panamanan
hands. The "consensus" also calls for increased hemispheric efforts toward
economic integration and against narcotrafficking and corruption.

The highest-profile event at the assembly was the overwhelming passage of a
resolution seeking a panel's opinion on the international legality of the
United States' "Helms-Burton" law. The resolution, which passed by a 23-1
margin with the U.S. as the only dissenting vote, seeks to review the U.S.
measure, which allows U.S. nationals to sue foreign firms that use their
former property in Cuba.

Helms-Burton is widely opposed in the hemisphere, as it is viewed as a U.S.
attempt to enforce its laws beyond its borders. 33 of the 34 OAS members
sponsored the draft resolution, which was adopted on June 4. Mexico and
Canada -- the United States' two NAFTA partners -- led the effort to pass
the resolution, a rare example of OAS defiance of U.S. policy.

U.S. Ambassador to the OAS Harriet Babbitt reacted with strong language,
calling the resolution a "blatant interventionist" effort to overrule U.S.
domestic law and criticizing what she saw as its sponsors' "diplomatic
cowardice". Costa Rican Foreign Minister Fernando Naranjo characterized Ms.
Babbitt's language as "intemperate."37 Guatemalan President Alvaro Arzu
said the U.S. response was "very harsh."38 Honduran Foreign Minister Delmer
Urbizo Panting discarded the possibility that his vote on the issue would
have any effect on his country's "excellent relations" with the U.S.

Babbitt said that though the resolution was "not helpful", "it should not
overshadow the enormous areas of cooperation" at the meeting.39 OAS
Secretary-General Cesar Gaviria said the "frank dialogue"over Helms-Burton
strengthened and invigorated the organization. The next general assembly
will be held in Guatemala in 1997.

Endnotes

35 "Gaviria Calls for International Effort to Remove Central American Land
Mines." Central American News. Informatica International, June 8, 1996.